Industry Links

CHICAGO, IL | Messe Düsseldorf says the 5th drupa Global Trends Report was released at end of April 2018. Printers and suppliers from the majority of market sectors reported growing confidence in their companies’ economic performance. This year, performance patterns were tracked over the years. Packaging remains the most dynamic market, and there has been a steady improvement in confidence over the five years among commercial printers. For functional printers it is a similar situation, but this market showed an increased lack of confidence in 2017 for both printers and suppliers. The full report in English can be purchased online at the drupa website with the executive summary available in German, English, French, Portuguese, Spanish, Russian, and Chinese free of charge.

The next drupa show takes place June 16−26, 2020, in Düsseldorf, Germany.

Sabine Geldermann, director drupa at Messe Düsseldorf, says, “The report indicates that print can be optimistic about the future. After the 2008 global recession and the consumer shift to digital communications, printers and suppliers are taking full advantage of the slow but clear global economic recovery. They develop new business models, innovative future technologies, and broaden the versatile application of print.”

More than 700 printers and almost 250 suppliers (senior managers who visited drupa 2016) participated in the survey. Regionally, the situation is positive in general but with exceptions. North America has consistently been the strongest region over time, although Europe has shown steadily increasing confidence, while Africa and the Middle East see clear decline in confidence over time.

Globally, this is the fourth year of increasing confidence reported by suppliers. Noticeable is the increase in sales of core equipment/software/materials (+29% net total). Overall, all supplier revenue streams showed their best ever net positive balance.

Printers globally report that the pressure on prices and margins continues and is coped with best by ever-increasing capacity utilization and, hence, revenues which hold costs as steady as possible. There is evidence that over time, the squeeze on prices and margins is decreasing somewhat globally. However, regionally the situation is inconsistent. While North America reported some increase in prices, Australia/Oceania reported a clear drop in pricing. Package printing prices are holding up globally while publishing and to a lesser degree—commercial printing prices continue to decline.

The transition to digital print continues but slowly, with functional printers now largely dependent on digital print and only a few packaging printers currently report significant digital sales (60% of functional printers report that more that 50% of turnover is digital, while for just 12% of packaging printers more than 25% of turnover is digital). Especially noticeable is that only 27% of all printers operate a web to print/storefront installation, up just 2% from 2014.

Globally, printers were more willing to invest: 42% reported an increase in capital expenditure compared to the previous year while 9% reported a decline—a positive net balance of 33%. North America performed best with a net balance increase of 51%, while Australia/Oceania lagged farthest behind with a net increase of only 18%. Not surprisingly, says the report, packaging printers reported the largest positive net balance at +45%, functional at +42%, commercial at +30%, and publishing at +20%. Finishing is the most popular focus for investment for the second year in a row, followed by print technology and prepress/workflow/MIS.

Plans for print investment in 2018 depend on the market sector, with flexo as the most popular choice in packaging, followed by sheet-fed offset.

This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.